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Right to the Source
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Right to the Source returns with its first episode of 2026, and this week Ed Birkin and Robin Harrison are joined by Erland Hellström and Simon Hammon of slot disruptor Big Daddy Gaming.
Hellström is a veteran of Evolution and Hammon’s slot heritage stretches back to NetEnt’s Starburst, so there’s some serious muscle behind Big Daddy Gaming, but how are they going to build something that can disrupt an established order in a busy market?
Chapters
(00:00:15) - Robin Harrison on Banksy(00:02:57) - No gambling on the IGB podcast(00:04:00) - Warm Welcome to Big Daddy Gaming(00:04:36) - Big Daddy Gaming Interview(00:08:00) - Big Daddy Reboot: The(00:10:51) - What is the Big Daddy(00:12:54) - Irish CEO on the country's gaming landscape(00:14:07) - Simon Mansion on Online Casinos(00:16:12) - Slot Machine: AI vs Quality(00:19:27) - Irish slot tax debate, RTP(00:24:56) - Slots: Should Content Suppliers Be Held Responsible for(00:27:53) - How Much Visibility Do Game Developers Have Over Where Their Games Go(00:29:30) - Direct-to-Consumer, Aggregation(00:31:03) - Introducing Big Daddy's Slot(00:36:03) - Starburst(00:37:08) - What is the formula for a Top Title?(00:38:09) - Simon Erlen and John Hodgson on Right to the Source
Right to the Source made its comeback in April this year and 28 episodes in, we’re winding down for the holidays. But not before we decide who has been naughty and nice.
Yes, this festive special recaps 2025, picking out the overarching themes whether that’s the rise of prediction markets, the rise of taxes, or the fall of regulated market share in the Netherlands.
There’s also a quiz to test how much Ed Birkin actually knows about H2 Gambling Capital’s data, and whether Robin Harrison reads the iGamingBusiness.com site every day.
A huge thanks to all our listeners for tolerating us in 2025, and we’ll be back in the new year!
Chapters
(00:00:14) - The Most Used Phrase In The Podcast This Year(00:03:40) - Will More States liberalize casino gambling?(00:04:03) - Idaho Business Podcast(00:07:52) - Crypto's March to Legitimation(00:08:55) - Pintasia Salary Survey(00:11:11) - 2017: Key developments and themes for the year(00:15:17) - Top 10 gambling themes of 2017(00:17:21) - The Host of This(00:17:46) - Quizzes(00:18:22) - 735 downloaded from H2 database in the past week(00:19:34) - iGaming Business's Best Article of 2025(00:22:00) - Oceania's contribution to global gambling(00:22:58) - Igaming Business: Brazil's Tag Posts in 2025(00:24:33) - What market share did Sporting Bet have in Brazil in 2025?(00:26:49) - How much unlicensed GGR in Brazil?(00:28:22) - Santa's List(00:29:46) - Christmas Eve: The Nice List
It’s taken us a long time to get it live but Right to the Source’s lost episodes from G2E are slowly being uncovered, starting with the Plaza Hotel and Casino CEO Jonathan Jossel who talks Downtown, revitalising Vegas and Big John.
Chapters
(00:00:06) - The Weak Member of the Jewish Family(00:00:48) - Interview With Jonathan(00:01:00) - Interview(00:01:37) - The 29-year-old CEO of Las Vegas' oldest casino(00:03:45) - The Plaza Hotel's transformation(00:06:35) - President Trump on Las Vegas' economy(00:11:25) - Questions for the Plaza's Customers(00:12:24) - The Love Letter I Had For Big John(00:15:25) - Las Vegas Business Talk: Downtown
Right to the Source returns with the three New York downstate casino licences seemingly destined for Queens and the Bronx, a deep dive into Monarch Casino & Resort, while Ed Birkin lives out the film Her with ChatGPT.
Chapters
(00:00:15) - Robin Harrison on The Muppets Christmas Carol(00:00:58) - Story of the Week(00:02:09) - Q&A(00:07:29) - The Jacksonville Jaguars' chances of making the NFL playoffs(00:11:34) - Pundits predict Sheffield Wednesday's relegation(00:12:22) - Monarch Casino: Does It Need a Hero?(00:14:36) - Talking about the Las Vegas and Reno revenues(00:15:22) - How Big Is the US Casino Market?(00:19:16) - My Dog's 'Persona'(00:20:04) - Talking To My Chat GPT Assistant(00:21:59) - Monarch Casino: Potentially Saved?(00:22:30) - Child's questions about Switzerland(00:26:07) - Talking Lottery in Switzerland(00:26:54) - Podcast
Everyone’s had their say on last week’s Budget in the UK, which heralds a hike in remote gaming duty to 40% next year, and an increase in remote betting duty to 25% of GGR from 2027. But is it going to push all gambling activity offshore, and will it yield £1.1 billion in new tax revenue as the Office for Budget Responsibility claims? Ed Birkin is not so sure.
Chapters
(00:00:15) - Robin Hood(00:01:33) - UK Budget Special(00:03:25) - UK budget: Will the onshore market shrink?(00:09:57) - The Tax on Gambling Advertising(00:11:10) - Gambling Commission budget: Should it be cut?(00:13:18) - OBR: The UK's public finances(00:22:14) - Wales gambling tax: Doomsday scenarios are too optimistic?(00:25:56) - Steve Monash on the black market(00:30:08) - Brexit and the UK oil and gas industry(00:31:49) - Good Marketing and Terrible Gambling Adverts(00:33:48) - Robin's Happy Ending
Right to the Source is getting existential as developments in the US prompt discussions on grey market gambling - and whether it's all just illegal - before a deep dive into gambling in Argentina.
Chapters
(00:00:00) - Robin Harrison on Bebop From Rocksteady(00:01:39) - Turkey's gambling crackdown(00:04:37) - DraftKings, FanDuel to Give Up Their Nevada License for(00:11:43) - Hard Rock's Sports Casino Plan(00:16:59) - "It's a funny old time for gambling"(00:18:31) - Argentina: Bet365 and the grey market(00:21:34) - Are there gray markets in the gambling industry?(00:25:47) - Black Market and grey market(00:28:01) - Argentina: Big Gaming Machine Market(00:32:59) - Random country generator(00:33:32) - Monarch Casino(00:34:29) - Monarch Casino: How many slot machines do they have?
Right to the Source is back and it’s bouncing around the world, as Ed Birkin sizes up the UAE online gambling market, Robin Harrison talks up Allwyn taking full control of OPAP and prediction markets bring up memories of pie-eating 'keeper Wayne Shaw.
Chapters
(00:00:14) - Interviewing The Olsen Twins(00:03:48) - UAE gaming licence announcement(00:06:16) - Online gaming in the UAE(00:09:04) - The Most Expensive Pair Of Leather Trousers(00:11:34) - Liverpool chairman reads out his statement on Frank Lampard's dismissal(00:13:34) - Europa vs Malta: Cross-border Gambling(00:17:36) - Coinbase CEO's statement on market manipulation is appalling(00:20:26) - The Maximal Issue With Prediction Markets(00:24:40) - Opinion Poll(00:26:14) - Uganda's tax on e-commerce(00:27:07) - M&A: OPAP vs Alwyn Investment(00:32:21) - In the Elevator With the Olsen Twins(00:32:53) - Lottery Group Q2 2018 earnings release(00:36:03) - FDJ's Online Lottery(00:37:42) - French digital spend in France(00:38:24) - Random country generator(00:39:12) - Fashion Week(00:40:13) - The Most Famous People Started Out In Kids TV(00:41:58) - Selena Gomez AND Miley Cyrus
Right to the Source always threatens to bring on more guests and today we welcome Khalid Ali of the International Betting Integrity Association (IBIA), and dissect Banijay’s acquisition of Tipico.
Chapters
(00:00:00) - Right to the Source(00:04:26) - Podcasts on YouTube(00:05:55) - Crypto Seems Safe, But Doxing People?(00:07:04) - impressive how Winamax is totally under your radar(00:09:31) - Anticipation Over The Typico-Typico Deal(00:14:17) - Bett365 vs. Racecourse(00:18:27) - milo on Bet365 and Monetar(00:19:31) - How many guests have we had on the show?(00:20:10) - Khaled on Right to the Source(00:20:54) - IBEA's Sports Betting Integrity Rebrand(00:27:41) - The International Betting Integrity Association's Mission 2030(00:32:23) - SESCA's role in data and esports(00:34:26) - WG1: Collaboration with Institutions(00:38:48) - Hearts vs Celtic(00:41:44) - IBA Sports Wagering Advocacy(00:46:59) - Visit Our Website(00:47:34) - Podcast Research Society(00:48:07) - The Peaky Blinders Takeover(00:52:20) - Peaky Blinders
Right to the Source is back after a break for G2E, and it’s diving into all the week’s past controversies, whether that’s NBA gambling scandals or a set-to between Evolution and Playtech. Oh, and Sheffield Wednesday were placed in administration.
Chapters
(00:00:13) - Right To The Source(00:01:16) - The Owls are in administration(00:02:48) - NBA arrests linked to sports betting(00:08:38) - Playtech vs Evolution: What's Wrong With Calling Out Bad Things(00:14:08) - "It's Impossible for Suppliers to Be Part of a(00:20:30) - Ways of regulating gambling in the UK and Brazil(00:27:43) - The Guinness Zero Adverts(00:31:16) - Pod Topics: Non-Alcohol Beers(00:31:59) - The Random Country Generator(00:32:20) - KSA: Channelization to Onshore(00:32:46) - Basic information about Mauritius, Uganda and Nauru(00:35:02) - Podcasters: Listenership Numbers(00:36:29) - Right to the Source: Uganda and OPAP
Right to the Source tackles crypto pivots, a tale of two resorts in Singapore and Golden Matrix’s B2C shift.
Ed Birkin and Robin Harrison have a frank exchange of views on Yolo Group’s regulated market pivot to kick off. This hinges on whether the move gives the crytpo giant an unfair advantage thanks to its scale and revenue, or simply follows an ongoing industry cycle.
We then discuss the contrasting fortunes of Resorts World Sentosa and Marina Bay Sands in Singapore, then Golden Matrix becoming a B2C business through its acquisition of Meridianbet.
Chapters
(00:00:00) - Beavis and Butthead(00:01:21) - Football(00:04:51) - On YOLO Group's Plan to Shift From Crypto to a(00:11:45) - Black Operators(00:14:49) - Sands vs Genting: Singapore(00:16:26) - Sands vs Genting: Singapore's gaming market(00:18:50) - Singapore sports betting monopoly(00:22:34) - Meridian Bet: An Interesting One(00:26:56) - Right to the Source
Right to the Source is back with Ed Birkin beaming in live from Lisbon, and social casino pioneer Zynga, the Congo and Mauritius are up for discussion.
Chapters
(00:00:13) - Right to the Source(00:01:20) - Celtic vs Sheffield Wednesday(00:05:18) - Long Couples and Fishermen(00:06:42) - Wonders of the World: Dave Reebuck on(00:09:07) - Social Casino: The parallels with Zynga(00:13:48) - Social Casino and Zynga(00:18:41) - Are Social Casinos Attempting to Pass Legislation?(00:20:36) - In the Elevator With Pierre(00:21:20) - Taxonomy: Africa(00:26:47) - How does gambling tax differ in Mauritius?(00:30:05) - Random country generator(00:33:25) - Write To The Source
Right to the Source is back and this week Robin Harrison and Ed Birkin are talking Groupe Partouche in the wake of their third quarter results, and the Georgian gambling market.
Groupe Partouche benefits from new casino launches
The third quarter results showed Groupe Partouche benefiting from a bigger casino portfolio, with a new venue in Cannes and one further afield in Benin contributing to a 5.3% year-on-year rise in revenue.
That prompts the question: Can French operators leverage shared language to expand into Francophone Africa, much like we are seeing Spanish gaming businesses do in Latin America?
And talk of France means talk of iCasino is never far away. Groupe Partouche, with operations in Belgium and Switzerland, could be building up its capabilities. Depending on whether there is any regulatory progress and if it can leverage its land-based database, could it carve out share in France’s future online gaming market?
The Georgian gambling market
We’re talking the country not the state, but interestingly gambling in Georgia accounts for 3.5% of GDP. That’s the highest level of any country H2 Gambling Capital tracks, Ed points out.
And while attractions such as “Black Sea Vegas” Batumi are designed to bring in the players, online is the real story in Georgia, making up the vast majority of revenue.
Georgian gambling is also dominated by major industry players, with Crystalbet (Entain) and Adjarabet (Flutter) battling for supremacy. However it’s local operator Crocobet growing rapidly.
All this and the usual diversions into the sublime and the ridiculous in the latest Right to the Source!
Chapters
(00:00:14) - Right to The Source(00:01:56) - Wagering data for Sheffield Wednesday and the Jags(00:06:16) - Wonders of the Week(00:09:06) - French operators in francophone Africa(00:11:37) - France: Slot and table games(00:19:15) - "I Don't Like Being Watched"(00:19:43) - What Sort Of Job Would You Wear Dungarees?(00:21:58) - Georgia and the size of the gambling market(00:28:03) - Voting age raised to 16 in the UK(00:33:00) - Gambling and the UK election(00:34:54) - Mauritius vs Congo(00:35:59) - Right to the Source
Right to the Source is back and under the microscope this week is the Belgian gambling market and Zeal Network.
Belgian gambling market shrugs off restrictions
In episode 18 Robin Harrison and Ed Birkin start off by discussing why gambling revenue in Belgium continues to grow. Revenue in 2024 rose despite the regulator and politicians constantly tightening controls on the industry.
Considering it has been an early mover with deposit limits, advertising bans and deposit limits Belgian gaming growth may embolden other markets to get strict on their licensees. If the market continues to grow, what's the harm? But Belgian gaming benefits from a unique quirk, and it’s quite a surprising factor that may contribute to that continued growth.
Zeal for change
Next up discussion turns to Zeal Network, Germany’s lottery brokerage business that could prove a blueprint for companies looking to transition to more sustainable business models. Having successfully executed a pivot from lottery betting to brokerage, the addition of online slots may be building a formidable business.
Chapters
(00:00:00) - Robin Harrison on Muppets and Sesame Street(00:01:31) - Interviewing The Muppets(00:03:02) - Oilers T-Shirt(00:03:39) - Wednesday fans' loyalty(00:07:20) - Gary Bowyer Sentencing(00:09:06) - Jaguar employee borrows $22 Million(00:10:34) - Wales: Onshore licenses in Belgium(00:15:39) - Offshore betting and gaming in Belgium(00:17:41) - Brexit and the land based casino industry in Belgium(00:21:21) - Germany's Lotteries(00:27:24) - Are German CEOs called Dr. Doctors?(00:30:07) - Random Country Generators(00:30:53) - Georgia
Right to the Source is back after a week’s break and Ed Birkin of H2 Gambling Capital has been saving up some rants for this episode, but we start looking at the Cambodian casino market.
After Cambodian online gambling was outlawed in 2019, the country’s casino market was the only show in town. But Covid-19 and a crackdown on junkets has effectively left operators struggling to return to pre-pandemic revenue levels.
That even affects NagaCorp, Cambodian gaming’s local listed giant with a monopoly on casinos in and within 200km of the country’s capital Phnom Penh.
Chapters
(00:00:16) - Return to the Source(00:02:00) - Can You Choose Which NHL Team To Support?(00:04:17) - No planning for the Paris Agreement(00:05:11) - Pixbet vs Flamengo(00:11:56) - Second Story of the Week: Cambodia(00:12:55) - What is the situation in Cambodia and the Philippines?(00:15:12) - Cambodian casino market(00:17:00) - Why Cambodia will not in the foreseeable future recover to pre-c(00:18:50) - Cambodia's VIP vs Mass market(00:20:27) - Cambodia vs Belgium(00:22:46) - Ranting About Data Based Ranting(00:22:58) - Ranting About Crypto Data...(00:27:37) - Right to the Source: The Crypto Number
Right to the Source is back with more data deep dives, debates and diatribes, this week bringing in special guest Jon Bruford to dissect Gordon Brown stepping into the GB gambling tax debate.
The former Prime Minister and Chancellor has thrown his weight behind a proposal to hike gambling duty to 50% of GGR in Great Britain. Only his proposal, and the evidence he puts forward to support it, doesn’t really hold up to scrutiny.
GB gambling tax hike: What do the reformists actually want?
Ultimately, he’s pitching gambling as a solution to child poverty. Considering gambling is regularly decried as the cause of poverty by the anti-industry lobby, that’s quite the volte-face. And how can people match up treating gambling as a golden goose with calls for new restrictions designed to reduce gambling revenue in Great Britain?
With Bruford, co-host of The Gambling Files podcast, joining to pick apart Gordon Brown’s claims, it gets interesting. And where else will you hear about launching a competing magazine to Runner’s World as part of the conversation?
As promised in our last episode, Robin and Ed also talk about gambling in South Korea, and scope for Canadian provinces joining Alberta and Ontario in liberalising their lottery monopolies.
We’ll be taking a break in the coming week, but that leaves you lots of time to listen to this week’s!
Chapters
(00:00:16) - John Hurt on Star Wars(00:03:00) - Korean food in Bristol(00:04:07) - How does gambling affect the country's economy?(00:04:53) - Kangwan Land: The only foreigner-only casino in Korea(00:08:38) - Canada vs. Baseball(00:10:51) - On Juan Soto's $765 Million Contract(00:13:50) - Ontario and Bet365: Should Ontario be licensed?(00:18:56) - Sweden: Top 5 Crypto Casinos Generating 29% of(00:20:43) - Stroke Fact of the Week(00:22:24) - What is the Cambodian cuisine?(00:23:16) - Does NagaCorp have operations in Cambodia?(00:24:58) - Gordon Brown backs gambling tax(00:28:38) - Gordon Brown on the UK's casino plan(00:32:21) - Gordon Brown on Gambling Tax(00:38:07) - Right to the Source
Right to the Source is back and Ed Birkin is on his soapbox as he takes aim at those talking up the size of Brazil’s illegal gambling market and estimates on the scale of the crypto gambling sector!
A reality check for Brazil gambling licensees
Robin Harrison tries (and fails) to stem the tide amid Ed’s diatribes in this episode, but this reality check, for Brazilian gaming licensees in particular, is important.
By constantly talking up how prevalent illegal gambling in Brazil is, the industry may be setting itself up for higher taxes, further restrictions on marketing and product, and ultimately turn the conversation into a self-fulfilling prophecy.
Chapters
(00:00:15) - Right to the Source(00:01:43) - Gambling Podcast(00:02:45) - Uno on the Casino Floor(00:06:11) - $81.4 Billion Through Crypto Casinos(00:11:11) - Wednesday players refuse to play Burnley friendly(00:11:37) - Population. 2.2 million(00:12:11) - Talking about sports betting in Albania(00:13:34) - ALBANA: iGaming and GGR(00:18:28) - Brazil gambling tax take in June(00:21:32) - Offshore vs Onshore GGR in Brazil(00:26:43) - OPINION: Is the offshore market bigger than the onshore(00:33:11) - Ranting About Countries (Week 3)
Welcome back to Right to the Source, where Robin Harrison and Ed Birkin are digging into the Slovenian gambling market and discussing stalled progress of online gambling in Chile.
Land-based gambling in Slovenia rules the roost
First to Slovenia, where online gambling licences are linked to brick-and-mortar properties, meaning online remains far smaller than casinos and gaming halls. Land-based gaming, with 12 casinos in Slovenia and 25 gaming halls, continues to perform well, and Ed has the figures to shed more light on how it’s doing. But the online tethering and small market size is stunting online growth. Where other Eastern European gaming markets are transitioning into ominichannel operations, Slovenian gambling remains an in-person proposition.
Why can’t Chile regulate online gambling?
A long-haul flight late, we touch down in Chile, where legislative progress for online gambling has stalled. A bill introduced in 2022 and passed by the Chamber of Deputies in 2023 is now stalled in the Senate. As ever, offshore operators are thriving, with potential licensees unable to gain a foothold.
We’ve also got rap beefs and New York downstate casinos, a few words on Brazil, and Ed complaining about Sheffield Wednesday falling into disrepair.
Chapters
(00:00:16) - Right to the Source(00:01:39) - H2GC STAT of the Week(00:03:44) - UK betting restrictions(00:08:44) - Luxembourg vs Slovenia(00:11:37) - Slovenia: Tethering requirements(00:13:18) - Belgium vs Switzerland(00:14:10) - National dishes of Chile, Slovenia(00:14:38) - Chile's online gaming bill is stuck in the Senate(00:17:51) - Wales: Offshore gambling in Chile(00:21:02) - 74% of non-gamblers have a negative view of the(00:26:30) - Offshore Crypto: How big is it?(00:27:53) - How much do you know about Albania?(00:28:38) - Scotland vs Albania
Right to the Source is back and trying desperately to stick to formats as Robin Harrison and Ed Birkin talk through casinos in Liechtenstein, the potential of the Panama online gaming market and why Italian betting and gaming remains resilient.
The choice of markets may seem somewhat random, but it’s at least somewhat deliberate. We want to offer listeners a truly global view of the gaming market with the numbers to back it up.
Chapters
(00:00:00) - Right to the Source: Market Research in Italy(00:01:58) - Wonders of the Week(00:10:46) - Mr. Worldwide(00:11:14) - Ozzy Osbourne(00:12:54) - Liechtenstein's gambling tax bill(00:16:44) - Italy's gambling market, according to market research(00:17:41) - Italy's growing online gaming market(00:22:02) - Australia vs Slovenia(00:24:16) - Top Story(00:25:37) - Italian weddings
Right to the Source is back, and this week Robin Harrison and Ed Birkin are discussing the Peru online gaming market and whether Brazil casino regulation can be salvaged.
This week Ed is testing formats, so from last week’s random country generator Peru and Niger are up for discussion. Peru online gambling regulation passed last year, and while Brazil stole the spotlight, it’s a stable market and even the introduction of a 1% tax on turnover was shifted to GGR. However there’s a big presence from local brands, so can international operators carve out share without M&A activity?
The Niger gambling market, after some hasty research, is reasonably sized but suffers from the same drawbacks that hold back other African countries’ gaming markets, namely a lottery monopoly.
And last week Brazil’s omnibus bill to legalise a range of land-based gaming products, namely jogo de bicho, bingo halls and casinos failed to progress to a Senate vote. Does that mean the dream of regulated casino gambling in Brazil is dead?
Our special guest says in its current form, yes. Legislators supporting Brazil casino legalisation are now likely to apply what worked for sports betting, namely splitting out the casino proposal from the omnibus bill. But will that push things forward any time soon? Don’t hold your breath.
Watch on iGB: https://igamingbusiness.com/finance/right-to-the-source-online-gaming-peru-brazil-casino/
Chapters
(00:00:00) - Right to the Source(00:00:50) - Podcast(00:02:04) - Niger: Lottery and Casinos(00:03:37) - Peru(00:04:58) - Peru: Online Betting and Gaming Tax(00:07:46) - Betson's market share in Peru(00:10:02) - Colombia vs Peru: Onshore Channelization(00:10:43) - Number of brands and their impact on channelization(00:12:06) - Latam Interview(00:12:30) - A keynote at Clarion Events(00:13:33) - Online Tax in Peru(00:16:37) - Bingo in Brazil(00:20:28) - Bingo and Sports Betting in Brazil(00:23:58) - Q&A(00:25:50) - Right to the Source: Episode 11
Right to the Source hits the big 1-0, as Robin Harrison and Ed Birkin recover from iGB L!VE and discuss changes to the Netherlands gaming market and whether re-regulation in the New Zealand gaming market will be a success.
Once we get through the usual diversions - Ed’s footballing prowess, Christina Aguilera’s first number one single and famous people from New Zealand this time - we get down to the important stuff.
First up is the Netherlands online gaming market, in the wake of a ban on gambling sponsorship in sports and new player data from the Kansspelautoriteit. This leads into a discussion on lotteries, in particular whether a vertical driven by instant win games can be considered totally distinct from commercial peers.
And online casino in New Zealand will be regulated, with a bill introduced in the country’s parliament. But considering there’s a monopoly in place for sports betting, is that going to be enough to limit offshore competition?
Chapters
(00:00:16) - Robin Harrison on Oasis(00:04:45) - Clarion on Events and Its Future(00:05:20) - The Netherlands gambling advertising ban(00:11:09) - Wagering limits in the Netherlands(00:12:43) - Global Lottery Sales, By Category(00:14:09) - A message for Rosie Brewster and more(00:16:31) - Omnibus gambling bill in New Zealand(00:20:26) - New Zealand gambling market:(00:25:16) - Random country wagering(00:26:20) - Robin and Ed Birkin on Right to the Source




